Pre-reading: researching or understanding the context before you read.
Reading with/against the grain: reading and analyzing from the point of view of the author
Critical, close, inventive reading:
Reading for key terms: critically reading for specific terminology that is essential to the text's meaning - Louis Lafata
Glossing: briefly summarizing a portion of a text to obtain the gist of what the author is trying to convey (Louis LaFata)
Mapping: charting a text by making connections within the text
Annotating: taking notes of important points in a text
Critical Thinking: process of applying information gathered from observation, experience, reflection etc.(Angner Reyes)
Inquiry-driven: reading with the questioning mindset to find better questions and more important points and answers.
No right/wrong or pro/con:
“Negative” capability: theory of poet John Keat, a state of intentional open-mindedness paralleled in the literacy of other writers.(Angner Reyes)
10 on 1: an unlucky fight
Binaries: A situation in which only two distinct and often contrasting situations can exist; i.e. a light is either on or off but never in between. (Ryan Olson)
Reading & Writing:
Rhetoric: thestudy of the effective use of language. (Robin Pepper)
Summary:a comprehensiveand usually brief abstract, recapitulation,orcompendiumof previously stated facts orstatements.
Synthesizing:to form (a materialorabstractentity) by combining partsorelements ( opposed to analyze): tosynthesize a statement.
Response: like a comeback but less rude
Analysis: breaking a work down into its component parts and viewing them individually - Louis Lafata
Argument: challenging the author's main idea/believes or ideas. (Christian Reyes)
Concession: popcorn and soda at a baseball game
Straw man: a scarecrow
Citations: reference to a source
Use of sources: incorporating ideas of other authors to support and expand ideas.
Paraphrase: to restate a part of a text in your own words, while stating that it was said by the author (Jisu Pang)
Quotations: repeated use of expressions of parts of other artists work. ( Sam patterson)
Atribution: ascription (Damian de Vega); ascribing ideas to an author; giving the author credit
Thesis: a topic for an essay or article (Damian de Vega)
Organization: being neat and having everything in order and in complete control. (Damian de Vega)
Style: the arrangement of words into sentences in a sequence and form. (Joseph Plummer)
Transitions: phrases that signal relationships between separate ideas in literary work.
Voice: the individual writing style of an author, defined by the author's use of syntax, diction, dialogue, etc.
Rhetorical situation:the context of a rhetorical event that consists of an issue, an audience, and a set of constraints.
Genre:type of music
Author: the writer of the piece of literature (Chris Duckers)
Audience: the people that author aimed the material at
Context: frame of reference; text, subject, theme, topic. (Theresa Williams)
Purpose/Exigence: reason for a text, what it demands, why it exists. (Dana Blide)
Related to the inquiry:
Stigma: a mark or spot that is recognizable. (In medical terms)- A characteristic due to a abnormality or a past disease. Stephen Reeves
Identity politics: political arguments that focus upon the self-interest and perspectives of social minorities, or self-identified social interest groups.
Disability versus impairment: impairment is a problem in body function or structure, while disability, in addition to it being physical, cognitive, sensory, emotional or developmental, can also be social, political, cultural, and historical.
Deaf/deaf: Deaf signifies deaf culture; deaf signifies the physical impairment
Universal design: architectural rules meant for buildings to make them accessible to the disabled
Americans with Disabilities Act: a law enacted by the us congress that is a wide ranging civil rights law that prohibits discrimination based on disability
Cyborg: human with electromechanical implants (Sam Patterson)
Ableism: discrimination against the Disabled community. (Joseph Plummer)Linton's Theory:Garland-Thomson's Theory:Millett-Gallant's Theory:
KEY CONCEPTS (collaboratively constructed):
Reading
Pre-reading: researching or understanding the context before you read.
Reading with/against the grain: reading and analyzing from the point of view of the author
Critical, close, inventive reading:
Reading for key terms: critically reading for specific terminology that is essential to the text's meaning - Louis Lafata
Glossing: briefly summarizing a portion of a text to obtain the gist of what the author is trying to convey (Louis LaFata)
Mapping: charting a text by making connections within the text
Annotating: taking notes of important points in a text
Critical Thinking: process of applying information gathered from observation, experience, reflection etc.(Angner Reyes)
Inquiry-driven: reading with the questioning mindset to find better questions and more important points and answers.
No right/wrong or pro/con:
“Negative” capability: theory of poet John Keat, a state of intentional open-mindedness paralleled in the literacy of other writers.(Angner Reyes)
10 on 1: an unlucky fight
Binaries: A situation in which only two distinct and often contrasting situations can exist; i.e. a light is either on or off but never in between. (Ryan Olson)
Reading & Writing:
Rhetoric: the study of the effective use of language. (Robin Pepper)
Summary:a comprehensive and usually brief abstract, recapitulation,or compendium of previously stated facts or statements.
Synthesizing:to form (a material or abstract entity) by combining parts orelements ( opposed to analyze): to synthesize a statement.
Response: like a comeback but less rude
Analysis: breaking a work down into its component parts and viewing them individually - Louis Lafata
Argument: challenging the author's main idea/believes or ideas. (Christian Reyes)
Concession: popcorn and soda at a baseball game
Straw man: a scarecrow
Citations: reference to a source
Use of sources: incorporating ideas of other authors to support and expand ideas.
Paraphrase: to restate a part of a text in your own words, while stating that it was said by the author (Jisu Pang)
Quotations: repeated use of expressions of parts of other artists work. ( Sam patterson)
Atribution: ascription (Damian de Vega); ascribing ideas to an author; giving the author credit
Thesis: a topic for an essay or article (Damian de Vega)
Organization: being neat and having everything in order and in complete control. (Damian de Vega)
Style: the arrangement of words into sentences in a sequence and form. (Joseph Plummer)
Transitions: phrases that signal relationships between separate ideas in literary work.
Voice: the individual writing style of an author, defined by the author's use of syntax, diction, dialogue, etc.
Rhetorical situation: the context of a rhetorical event that consists of an issue, an audience, and a set of constraints.
Genre:type of music
Author: the writer of the piece of literature (Chris Duckers)
Audience: the people that author aimed the material at
Context: frame of reference; text, subject, theme, topic. (Theresa Williams)
Purpose/Exigence: reason for a text, what it demands, why it exists. (Dana Blide)
Related to the inquiry:
Stigma: a mark or spot that is recognizable. (In medical terms)- A characteristic due to a abnormality or a past disease. Stephen Reeves
Identity politics: political arguments that focus upon the self-interest and perspectives of social minorities, or self-identified social interest groups.
Disability versus impairment: impairment is a problem in body function or structure, while disability, in addition to it being physical, cognitive, sensory, emotional or developmental, can also be social, political, cultural, and historical.
Deaf/deaf: Deaf signifies deaf culture; deaf signifies the physical impairment
Universal design: architectural rules meant for buildings to make them accessible to the disabled
Americans with Disabilities Act: a law enacted by the us congress that is a wide ranging civil rights law that prohibits discrimination based on disability
Cyborg: human with electromechanical implants (Sam Patterson)
Ableism: discrimination against the Disabled community. (Joseph Plummer) Linton's Theory: Garland-Thomson's Theory: Millett-Gallant's Theory: